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{{wikify}}
{{Header Nav|game=Animal Crossing}}
A racoon dog in all AnimalCrossing games that gives you a part-time job when you arrive to a town.Once you finish the job,you can start your life.You have to pay your loan when you can because you arive with no place to stay.Tom lets you live in any house you choose.You need to pay your loan back.You can pay it off by selling him stuff you dont need or enter this 3 times only per day:WB2&pARAcnOwnUjMCK%hTk8JHyrT.Recieve 30,000 bells by entering the code entered here.The more you shop in his store,the more bigger he makes his shop.When he remodels,he sends you a letter in the gamecube game and posts on the board in front of townhall in NintendoDS.Someday he'll get a big shop called Nookingtons with a hair salon:Shampoodle!
{{Game
|completion=4
|image=ACPG Box Art.png
|title=Animal Crossing
|japanese=どうぶつの森
|developer=[[Nintendo EAD]]
|publisher=[[Nintendo]]
|year=2001
|systems={{syslist|n64|gc|ique}}
|ratings={{ESRB|E}}{{PEGI|3}}
|genre=[[Simulation]]
|players=1-4 alternating
|modes=[[Single player]]
|followed by=[[Animal Crossing: Wild World]]
|series=Animal Crossing
}}
{{Nookipedia}}
'''Animal Crossing''' is a [[simulation]] game developed by [[Nintendo EAD]] and published by [[Nintendo]]. It was originally released exclusively in Japan as {{nihongo|'''Animal Forest'''|どうぶつの森|Doubutsu no Mori}} for the [[Nintendo 64]] on April 14, [[2001]]. It was then ported and re-released for the [[Nintendo GameCube]] in December, 2001, again exclusively in Japan, as {{nihongo|'''Animal Forest+'''|どうぶつの森+|Doubutsu no Mori Purasu}}. It was later released in other countries in 2002-2004. A final version, titled {{nihongo|'''Animal Forest e+'''|どうぶつの森e+|Doubutsu no Mori ii Purasu}}, was released in Japan in [[2003]].


expand the stores by doing these things:
Animal Crossing is the first game compatible with the short-lived [[e-Reader]].
* Nook's Cranny: beginning of the game.
* Nook'n'go: spend 25,000 bells.
* Nook way: spend 90,000 bells.
* Nookingtons: spend 240,000 bells and have someone from another town to buy something at Nookway.


==Table of Contents==
As a real-life simulation video game, Animal Crossing revolves around you—the player—as you live day-by-day in a town full of animals. However, up to four humans can live in a town at a time. Just like the real world players must run errands, earn money, and even pay debt. This game then birthed a sequel with the [[Nintendo DS]] game, [[Animal Crossing: Wild World]] (おいでよどうぶつの森, Come to Animal Forest).
* [[/Passwords/]]
 
[[Category:GameCube]]
==Artwork==
<gallery>
File:Animal Forest cover.jpg|Japanese exclusive Animal Forest N64 cover.
File:Animal Forest e+ cover.jpg|Japanese exclusive Animal Forest e+ cover.
</gallery>
 
{{ToC}}
{{Animal Crossing}}
 
[[Category:Nintendo Entertainment Analysis and Development]]
[[Category:Nintendo]]
[[Category:Simulation]]
[[Category:Single player]]
[[Category:Single player]]
[[Category:Animal Crossing]]
{{GFDL Article}}

Latest revision as of 19:22, 4 April 2023

This is the first game in the Animal Crossing series. For other games in the series see the Animal Crossing category.

Box artwork for Animal Crossing.
Box artwork for Animal Crossing.
Animal Crossing
Developer(s)Nintendo EAD
Publisher(s)Nintendo
Year released2001
System(s)Nintendo 64, Nintendo GameCube, iQue Player
Followed byAnimal Crossing: Wild World
SeriesAnimal Crossing
Japanese titleどうぶつの森
Genre(s)Simulation
Players1-4 alternating
ModesSingle player
Rating(s)ESRB EveryonePEGI Ages 3+
LinksAnimal Crossing ChannelSearchSearch

Animal Crossing is a simulation game developed by Nintendo EAD and published by Nintendo. It was originally released exclusively in Japan as Animal Forest (どうぶつの森 Doubutsu no Mori?) for the Nintendo 64 on April 14, 2001. It was then ported and re-released for the Nintendo GameCube in December, 2001, again exclusively in Japan, as Animal Forest+ (どうぶつの森+ Doubutsu no Mori Purasu?). It was later released in other countries in 2002-2004. A final version, titled Animal Forest e+ (どうぶつの森e+ Doubutsu no Mori ii Purasu?), was released in Japan in 2003.

Animal Crossing is the first game compatible with the short-lived e-Reader.

As a real-life simulation video game, Animal Crossing revolves around you—the player—as you live day-by-day in a town full of animals. However, up to four humans can live in a town at a time. Just like the real world players must run errands, earn money, and even pay debt. This game then birthed a sequel with the Nintendo DS game, Animal Crossing: Wild World (おいでよどうぶつの森, Come to Animal Forest).

Artwork[edit]

Table of Contents

edit